Violence, Harm and Trauma Research Group
Description
The Violence, Harm and Trauma Research Group is based in the School of Humanities at York St John University.
This research group investigates violence, harm, and trauma through a historical, social, cultural, and psychological lens to think about the ways in which horrific acts are explained, rationalised, and represented.
These might include brutality that humans inflict upon one another or in contact with non-human agents, in addition to the violence associated with animals, landscape and disaster.
In recent years, historians of captivity and mental health, but also criminologists and forensic mental health professionals have highlighted new perspectives to explore mediated and lived experiences of harm, violence, and trauma.
Using studies of coercion, mental health, memory, mourning, gender, race, society, but also material, visual and popular cultures, this group explores the ways in which violence, harm, and trauma overlap, but also the ways in which they can be understood, depicted, and decoded as distinct spheres of injury, suffering and emotional responses, including disgust and shame. In doing so, the research group offers a platform to examine historical changes in what behaviours, situations, beings (human or non-human) and narratives have been understood as ‘harmful’, ‘violent’ and/or ‘traumatic’, and how such constructions might provide an insight into wider societal and cultural phenomena.
The group began as an interdisciplinary combination of active researchers from History, American studies, English Literature and Film studies, with the intention of expanding to include researchers from other disciplines within and beyond the Humanities and Social Sciences.
The group provides a friendly and supportive space comprising of academics and postgraduate researchers, offering a safe and inclusive environment to discuss emerging research ideas, present research papers, prepare funding bids, and coordinate public engagement events/outputs.
Research strands include:
- Fashion and harmful objects (for example, corsets)
- Trauma in crime fiction
- Capture and experiences of war captivity
- ‘Harmful insects’ in colonial experiences and print culture
- Shellshock during World War I
- Horror and slasher films.
Offers funding
No, this infrastructure does not provide funding.
Contact details
Lord Mayors Walk
York
YO31 7EX
United Kingdom
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University affiliation(s)
York St John University
Lord Mayor's Walk
York
YO31 7EX
Last modified:
2023-09-20 14:59:46